SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 1,
March 2012,
pp. 271-279
Summary
Matrix-acidizing models have traditionally underpredicted acid-stimulation
benefits because of underprediction of wormhole penetration and the
corresponding magnitude of completion-skin factors in vertical wells. For long
horizontal wells drilled in carbonate reservoirs, productivity enhancement is a
function of acid placement and effective wormhole penetration. However,
prediction of wormhole penetration requires more effective analysis than that
provided by current industry models. This paper presents results of matrix-acid
modeling work for horizontal wells and describes a practical engineering tool
for analyzing the progress of matrix-acid stimulation in carbonate
reservoirs.
The wormhole-growth model is based on the Buijse and Glasbergen empirical
correlation. Combining with the mechanistic model of the wormhole propagation
based on acid transport and fluid loss from a single wormhole, a modified
Buijse-Glasbergen wormhole-growth model is developed that relates the wormhole
growth rate to the in-situ injection velocity at the tip of the dominant
wormhole. The wormhole constitutive model developed in this study also accounts
for core-size dependencies seen in laboratory acid-flood experiments. A
semianalytical flow correlation is derived for estimating interstitial
velocities at the tip of the dominant wormholes based on a number of 3D FEM
simulation analyses, accounting for more realistic flow regimes (radial and
spherical flow) typically observed in field application. The scaleup procedure
developed in this study extends the wormhole geometry and penetration from
laboratory flow tests on small cores to field-sized treatments.
The scaleup procedure developed in this work can be applied to cemented and
uncemented horizontal wells, including barefoot and perforation-cluster
completions typically employed in carbonate reservoirs. Application of this
modeling shows that acid wormholing through carbonate formations can provide
significant stimulation, resulting in post-stimulation skins as low as -3.5 to
-4.0 vs. previously predicted values in the -1.0 to -2.0 range.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
3,663 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
23 June 2010
- Meeting paper published:
21 September 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
22 January 2011
- Manuscript approved:
26 January 2011
- Published online:
25 October 2011
- Version of record:
13 March 2012